US7904276B1 - Method and business process for the estimation of erosion costs in assemble-to-order manufacturing operations - Google Patents
Method and business process for the estimation of erosion costs in assemble-to-order manufacturing operations Download PDFInfo
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- G06Q—INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
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- G06Q—INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- G06Q10/00—Administration; Management
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- G06Q10/087—Inventory or stock management, e.g. order filling, procurement or balancing against orders
Definitions
- the present invention is generally related to resource-planning methods used by manufacturing companies and other organizations. More specifically, it relates to risk management in the procurement of unfinished goods by estimation of expected excess component inventory and erosion costs.
- ATO assemble-to-order
- MTS Manufacture-to-stock
- ATO ATO manufacturing operations whenever possible.
- ATO allows manufacturers to minimize their component inventories. This reduces the amount of capital invested in components and reduces the risk that components will loose value or become obsolete before they are transformed and sold as products.
- the availability of components is the key variable that controls the ability to produce. If component availability is limited (either because inventory is limited or because supplier commitments to ship the component on demand are insufficient) then fulfillment of demand either fails or is delayed. On the other hand, if excess inventory is left over, it must be liquidated or utilized later. Both outcomes are costly to the company. If the company liquidates, it may be forced to do so at substantially reduced prices. Many items lose value because of innovation. This is especially true in the especially in the fast moving high-tech sector where goods, such as microprocessor are continually superseded with cheaper more powerful replacements. In other industries there are shelf life considerations that make it costly to try to utilize excess inventory at a later time. In both cases there is capital tied up in extra inventory and that corresponds to incurring a cost equivalent to the firms funding rate.
- erosion cost The cost incurred for component inventory that exceeds the inventory required to meet demand is referred to as the erosion cost.
- the estimation of erosion costs is paramount in making intelligent business decisions about the proper amount of components to obtain commitments in any given period. This is particularly true when a large number of products are made from a large number of the same components.
- An embodiment of the present invention includes a method for the computation of surplus components.
- a planner first identifies each component required to produce a product.
- the planner defines a planned level and an uncancelable level.
- the planned level for a component is the quantity at which the component is expected to be available.
- the uncancelable level for a component is the quantity of the component that cannot be liquidated without charge.
- the planner also defines a vector of connect rates for the components.
- an expected surplus is computed for each component.
- the component is assumed to be available at its uncancelable level.
- the remainder of the components are assumed to be available at their respective planned levels.
- the mean production for the component is computed and used, along with the uncancelable level the selected component and the vector of connect rates to compute the component's expected surplus. This computation is repeated for all components in turn.
- the expected component surpluses can then be used to compute the expected erosion cost per component and the total erosion cost for all components.
- An assemble-to-order (ATO) manufacturing process is one in which products are manufactured from raw components only as orders are received. While ATO processes are more efficient than manufacture-to-stock (MTS) operations, in which products are produced before demand is known, they are not without significant risks. If component availability is below what is required to meet product demand, then fulfillment of orders is either delayed or fails. Conversely, if excess component inventory remains after demand is met, the excess is either returned to the supplier, usually at a loss, or held until future need. Thus any component inventory that does not exactly meet demand incurs some financial loss for the manufacturer. Being able to predict the excess component inventory and associated financial loss allows a manufacturer to make more informed business decisions.
- the present invention addresses this need by providing a novel method for estimating component surplus and expected erosion costs.
- the erosion cost is simply the cost incurred for component inventory that exceeds the inventory required to meet demand.
- Estimation of erosion cost is particularly complicated when a large number of products are made from a large number of the same components, and thus the present invention is particularly advantageous under such conditions.
- the present invention provides a system for computing expected component surplus and erosion costs.
- the system is preferably a computer system containing a memory, input/output devices, and processing means for implementing the method.
- the present invention also provides a computer-readable medium of instructions executable by the computer to perform method steps for the method described above.
- the present invention applies equally regardless of the particular type of signal bearing media used.
- Examples of computer-readable media include: recordable-type media such as floppy disks and CD-ROMs and transmission-type media such as digital and analog communications links. It will be clear to one skilled in the art that the above embodiment may be altered in many ways without departing form the scope of the invention.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a computer system shown as a representative environment for deployment of the present invention.
- FIG. 2 is a flowchart showing the steps associated with an embodiment of the method for computing expected surplus of the present invention.
- FIG. 3 is a flowchart showing the steps associated with an embodiment of the method for computing expected erosion costs per component of the present invention.
- FIG. 4 is a flowchart showing the steps associated with an embodiment of the method for computing total expected erosion cost of the present invention.
- FIGS. 1 through 4 of the drawings Like numerals are used for like and corresponding parts of the various drawings.
- Component plan a list of quantities for each component, representing a company's component order for a given planning period.
- Scenario a set of assumptions about products and components.
- a scenario includes product parameters, component parameters, component consumption, component interactions, and an allocation policy.
- ATO assemble-to-order
- the availability of components is the key variable that controls the ability to produce. If component availability is limited (either because inventory is limited or because supplier commitments to ship the component on demand are insufficient), then fulfillment of demand either fails or is delayed.
- the estimation of the erosion costs is paramount in making intelligent business decisions about the proper amount of components to obtain commitments for in any given period.
- the essence of this invention is the ability to solve the above problems in cases where there is a plurality of products and components.
- a computer system 100 is shown as a representative environment for an embodiment of the present invention.
- computer system 100 includes a processor, or processors 102 , and a memory 104 .
- Processor 102 can be selected from a wide range of commercially available or custom types.
- An input device 106 and an output device 108 are connected to processor 102 and memory 104 .
- Input device 106 and output device 108 represent all types of I/O devices such as disk drives, keyboards, modems, network adapters, printers and displays.
- Computer system 100 may also includes a disk drive 110 of any suitable disk drive type (equivalently, disk drive 110 may be any non-volatile mass storage system such as “flash” memory).
- an embodiment of the present invention includes a Method 200 for the computation of surplus components (expected excess number of components remaining at the end of a period).
- Method 200 consists of the following steps:
- step 202 a user enters data describing one or more products and their associated components.
- the data entered includes all the data required for mean production computation as disclosed in the related application “Method and Business Process for the Estimation of Mean Production for Assemble-To-Order Manufacturing Operations.” In particular, this includes, for each product, information describing:
- This information can be input manually by the user or retrieved from a user database or other source.
- the value d i (referred to above as component allocations) represents the maximum number of that is available (i.e. the expeditable amounts specified for the mean production computations). In many cases, positioned components may be returning or canceled. In these cases, only the uncancelable portion is subject to erosion.
- the user enters (or otherwise inputs) a value d i 0 to represent the uncancelable portion of each component of interest.
- the quantity d i ⁇ d i 0 represents the number that can be liquidated or returned at no cost. For some components, return or liquidation of any amount has an associated cost.
- the value d i is equal to d i .
- Steps 204 through 214 form a loop. This loop sequences each component i for which the calculation of surplus components is desired.
- each component plan d i is set to its original value. This means that each component is assumed to be available in its planned quantity.
- step 208 the component plan for component i (i.e., d i ) is set to d i 0 . This means that component i is assumed to be available at the uncancelable level for that component.
- step 210 the component levels specified in steps 206 and 208 (i.e., d i 0 for component i and d i for all other components) are used to compute an expected mean production q i 0 for a specified planning period.
- d i 0 for component i and d i for all other components
- Monte Carlo simulation there are several methods, such as Monte Carlo simulation that may be used to perform this computation.
- the method disclosed in the related application “Method and Business Process for the Estimation of Mean Production for Assemble-To-Order Manufacturing Operations.”
- d i 0 is the uncancelable level for component i
- a i is the vector of connect rates for component i
- q i 0 is the expected mean production computed in step 210 .
- step 216 the expected excess is reported to the user or returned to the system for further use.
- an embodiment of the present invention includes a Method 300 for the computing the expected erosion costs per component (the expected financial cost of having leftover inventory for a subset of components).
- Method 300 consists of the following steps:
- step 302 a user inputs the erosion costs per surplus component.
- step 304 the expected surplus is evaluated using Method 200 . This step may be done in parallel with step 302 .
- step 306 the expected surplus is multiplied by the per-unit erosion costs to obtain the expected erosion cost for each component of interest.
- step 306 the expected erosion cost for each component of interest is reported to the user.
- step 308 we report the expected erosion cost for each component of interest.
- an embodiment of the present invention includes a Method 400 for computing the total expected erosion cost (i.e., estimating the total erosion cost a company should expect given a certain plan for component availability).
- Method 400 consists of the following steps:
- step 402 the component-by-component expected erosion costs are evaluated for all components of the planning portfolio. This step may be done in parallel.
- step 404 the numbers obtained in step 402 are summed.
- step 406 the single expected erosion cost number is reported back to the user, or stored for further processing by the system.
- embodiments of the present this invention relate generally to the field of manufacturing resource planning. More specifically, the present invention relates to risk management in the procurement of unfinished goods.
- the value of a surplus component is strictly less than its original value when it was purchased.
- the supply contract includes an option to return all or some of the component surplus subject to a cancellation fee.
- the cancellation fee is strictly less than the associated value erosion so that it will always be rational to exercise the cancellation option when it is available.
- a supply contract may also include an option to expedite extra components when component demand exceeds the stock. Again, expediting will carry with it an expediting fee which can be thought of as a premium for rush service. Just as there is a lower limit to how many components the supplier is willing to take back, there is also an upper limit beyond which components cannot be expedited at any cost. When demand exceeds component availability the company may charge itself a “penalty” for missed (or delayed) sales.
- a model is introduced of erosion and expediting based on a simplifying assumption that a distribution on component demand could be induced from product demand without regard to production policies. In this report we relax that assumption, recognizing that component consumption is not driven by product demand directly, but rather by production.
- Component supply d defines a feasible region ⁇ , in which component supply is sufficient to meet demand.
- the feasible region can be product specific.
- the feasible region from the perspective of product j may be different that that of product k.
- the feasible region with respect to product j is ⁇ (j), and the set of relevant components as (j).
- under uniform allocation (j) is the Markov Blanket associated with product j, where
- a ⁇ ( x , d ) max i ⁇ ( d i - a i ⁇ x a i ⁇ u , 0 ) . ( 2.10 )
- this function satisfies the gate mapping property.
- the producer has the option to return or cancel positioned components. In this case, only the uncancellable portion of component surplus will be subject to erosion.
- d (0) we denote the uncancellable portion of available components by d (0) .
- d i (0) we continue to denote the full component availability as d and production q ⁇ q(x,d), but we introduce the following additional notation d i (0) ⁇ [d i d 2 . . . d i (0) . . . d m ] H i (0) ⁇ x:d i (0) ⁇ [Ax] i ⁇ 0 ⁇ ⁇ i (0) ⁇ H i (0) q i (0) ⁇ q ( x,d i (0) )
- g i is some function which depends on the problem details. Its region of definition ⁇ i is the intersection of ⁇ with the complement of the region where i is gating.
- g i has an additional property: in its region of definition, it is independent of d i . This is the gate mapping property:
- Proposition 3.2 The production function defined in (2.9) and (2.10) is gate mapping. Proof. The max function in (2.10) ensures that demand is mapped back to hyperplane associated with the gating component.
- X i ( 1 ) ⁇ ( [ Aq ] i - d i ( l - 1 ) ) - [ Aq ] i - ( d i ( l ) ) , if ⁇ ⁇ q ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ H i ( 1 ) , [ Aq ] i - d i ( l - 1 ) , if ⁇ ⁇ d i ( l - 1 ) ⁇ [ Aq ] i ⁇ d i ( l ) 0 otherwise .
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Abstract
Description
-
- 1) The type of components required to produce the product,
- 2) The number of each component required (A),
- 3) Component allocations (d),
- 4) The mean demand for the product (μ),
- 5) The standard deviation of the demand for the product,
- 6) The correlations between the product and any other product.
C i (l) = E i (l) − E i (l−1)
X i (l) =(d i (l) −d i (l−1))−( E i (l) − E i (l−1) )
-
- opportunity cost of capital tied up in hard assets;
- technical erosion due to design changes and technological progress; and
- physical erosion due to spoilage.
e i=max(d i −[Aq] i,0)≡(d i −[Aq] i)+. (2.1)
Ω= H i. (2.2)
where denotes the set of relevant components, and Hi denotes the halfspace where component supply d is sufficient to meet demand. i e.,
H i ={x:d i −[Ax] i≧0}. (2.3)
Under prioritized allocation feasibility The production function q:x ∈ n→q ∈ Ω establishes a level of feasible production given product demand x and component availability d. In principle, it is desirable to produce as much as is feasible, but never more than what is demanded.
∂Ω=Ω∩(∪i ∂H i) (2.5)
where ∂Hi={x:di−[Ax]i=0}. For clarity we will also denote the i-th row of A by ai. Thus production is defined as follows
q(x,d)=x−au, where (2.9)
When u=x, this function satisfies the gate mapping property. Other values for u, i.e u=μ, may not satisfy the gate mapping property over all x ∈ n, but may represent reasonable approximations.
3 Erosion Net of Cancellation
d i (0) ≡[d i d 2 . . . d i (0) . . . d m]
H i (0) ≡{x:d i (0) −[Ax] i≧0}
Ωi (0) ≡Ω∩H i (0)
q i (0) ≡q(x,d i (0))
E i (0)=(d i (0) −[Aq] i)+ (3.1)
In the above definition,
Lemma 3.2 When production q is gate mapping as defined above, the production mappings q and qi (0) are equivalent with respect to demand for which there is erosion associated with component i. In math: q=qi (0) for all x ∈ {x:di (0)−[Aq]i>0}.
Proof. There are two cases in which the condition di (0)>[Aq]i holds:
Lemma 3.3 If there is no erosion associated with demand x when it is mapped by a gate mapping function q, there is also no erosion in component i when production is mapped by qi (0).
Proof. Let φ={x:di (0)−a, q(x,d)]i≦0}. Because production is gate mapping, q maps x ∈ φ to a point q ∉ Hi (0). Therefore, when the feasible region is constrained to Ωi (0) by adding the constraint q ∈ Hi (0), component i becomes gating for all x ∈ φ and therefore qi (0) will map that demand to the face of ∂Ωi (0) defined by the hyperplane ∂Hi (0)={q:di (0)−[Aq]i=0} along which there is no erosion.
Lemma 3.4 For all x ∈ n·di (0)−[Aq]i=di (0)−[Aqi (0)]i.
Proof. The proof follows directly from Lemmas 3.2 and 3.3. From Lemma 3.2 we see that when there is erosion, the production mapping q=qi (0). From Lemma 3.3 we see that when there is no erosion under q, the new mapping qi (0) maps demand to the hyperplane ∂Hi (0) where there is no erosion
E i (0) =d i (0) −a i · q i (0) . (3.4)
Proof. This proposition follows directly from Lemma 3.4 and Equation (2.8).
Proposition 3.2 The production function defined in (2.9) and (2.10) is gate mapping.
Proof. The max function in (2.10) ensures that demand is mapped back to hyperplane associated with the gating component.
4.1 Simple Cancellation
As before, we denote the uncancellable volume of components by d(0). We now denote the component plan by d(l), where the component plan represents the amount of component positioned. Cancellation only applies to components that have been positioned. We continue to denote available components (which may include expediting) by d.
C i =d i (l)−max(d i (0) ,[A,q] i). (4.1)
The cancellation is otherwise 0.
Proposition 4.1 When production is gate mapping, expected cancellation can be computed from two erosion computations:
C i = E i (l) − E i (0) . (4.2)
where
E i (l) ≡d i (l) −a i · q i (l) .
Proof. Expanding the definition in (4.1), yields
Taking the expected value of Ci over x ∈ n implies that
C i =(d i (l) −[Aq] i)+ − ( d i (0) −[Aq] i)+ (4.3)
We recognize the first term in (4.3) as simple erosion equivalent to Ei (l) . We recognize that the second term in (4.3) is equivalent to Ei (0) following the discussion of erosion with cancellation in §3.
4.2 Multilevel Cancellation
In principle, there may be many levels of cancellation (or expediting). We denote a cancellation or expediting level by l, where 0≦l≦L, and the associated volumes of components by d(l), where di (0)< . . . <di (l)< . . . di (L). Thus d=d(L) represents components available for production. We can now expand the analysis to multiple levels of cancellation and introduce the following expanded notation:
d (l) ≡[d i (l) . . . d m (l)],
H (l) ≡{x:d i (l) −[Ax] i≧0},
Ω(l)≡∩i∈[m] H i (l), and
q (l) ≡q(x,d (l)).
As before
d≡d (L),
H i ≡H (L),
Ω≡Ω(L), and
q≡q (L).
C i (l) = E i (l) − E i (l−1) . (4.4)
5 Expediting
Expediting is essentially the mirror problem to cancellation. However, instead of computing component surplus, we are computing component use. Thus while cancellation measured the nonnegative distance to an upper boundary, expediting measures then nonnegative distance to a lower boundary.
Proposition 5.1 When production is gate mapping, expected expediting can be computed as
X i (l) =(d i (l) −d i (l−1))−( E i (l) − E i (l−1) ). (5.2)
Proof. We follow the same logic as before. Expanding the definition in (5.1), yields
([Aq] i −d i (l))+ = [Aq] i −d i (l) +(d i (l) −[Aq] i)+ =a i·(q)−d i (l) + E i (l)
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| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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| US12/057,515 US7904276B1 (en) | 2000-06-21 | 2008-03-28 | Method and business process for the estimation of erosion costs in assemble-to-order manufacturing operations |
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| US21318900P | 2000-06-21 | 2000-06-21 | |
| US22961100P | 2000-08-31 | 2000-08-31 | |
| US09/887,539 US7356440B1 (en) | 2000-08-31 | 2001-06-21 | Method and business process for the estimation of erosion costs in assemble-to-order manufacturing operations |
| US12/057,515 US7904276B1 (en) | 2000-06-21 | 2008-03-28 | Method and business process for the estimation of erosion costs in assemble-to-order manufacturing operations |
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| US12/043,632 Expired - Fee Related US7896230B1 (en) | 2000-06-21 | 2008-03-06 | Method and business process for the estimation of erosion costs in assemble-to-order manufacturing operations |
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Cited By (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20100228682A1 (en) * | 2009-03-09 | 2010-09-09 | Hitachi, Ltd. | Project Simulation Method and System |
| WO2013066304A1 (en) * | 2011-10-31 | 2013-05-10 | Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. | Estimation of unobserved demand |
Families Citing this family (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US7356440B1 (en) | 2000-08-31 | 2008-04-08 | Rapt, Inc. | Method and business process for the estimation of erosion costs in assemble-to-order manufacturing operations |
| DE10330447A1 (en) * | 2003-07-05 | 2005-02-10 | Daimlerchrysler Ag | Apparatus and method for comparing components |
| US7974720B2 (en) * | 2008-08-12 | 2011-07-05 | Icon-Scm Gmbh & Co. Kg | Dynamic fulfillment planning method and apparatus |
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- 2001-06-21 US US09/887,539 patent/US7356440B1/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
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2008
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- 2008-03-28 US US12/057,515 patent/US7904276B1/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
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| WO2013066304A1 (en) * | 2011-10-31 | 2013-05-10 | Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. | Estimation of unobserved demand |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| US7896230B1 (en) | 2011-03-01 |
| US7356440B1 (en) | 2008-04-08 |
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